The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 1, 1913, Page 4

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THE STAR—FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1913. ° e \ { SIDELIGHTS ON SEATTLE HOME LIFE were THE SEATTLE STAR MAHER OF TI SCRIPTS NORTHWEST LEAGUP OF NEWSPANrns Paper haying full leased wire mews service of the United oclations, EILERS SEATTLE HOUSE BREAKS RECORD FOR JULY SALES |278 Pianos, Player Pianos and Grands Sold at a Sav- | ing of $31,970 to Purchasers. Seattle inwe matter ity. 8 apt » 8180, year $8.98 Pubiiahed Dally by The Star Publishing Co. Phone: Hachauge Mate 9400 BUY SEATILE MADE GOODS: THAT'S A GOOD INVESTMENT Wash. postoftice as second-« per my six moe six ‘TODA, ir soy To Jon ‘ ovr AT THE Are You ° ° ° The Passing of the Injunction ESO P y Magra T by injunction is on the decline. There 76 Pianos, Players and Grands to Be Sold Within a oing to 4 tas been a remarkable change in that respect in our Week—Prices and Terms Are so Low That Buy- y own King county and federal courts Your FATHER? LL. ing Becomes a Positive Duty. 9 ‘i With one exception, perhaps two, our local judges = ber rn bisoky eye ‘ é ioe 0 an A are not now so cager to issue restraining orders without first YoU WF You DON’T Wisse of Gas Inibenatits on Sale die Beand New Pi hearing from h parties to the action penave! f Established , iH Be It was not so long ago when it was the simplest thing anos of Established Reputation. Some Have Been) 35 5. you will want to take in the world to get a res ng order, It mattered not ; Slightly Used, But Will Be Delivered in the train that is most conven- what were the merits of the case Playing Condition. jent and offers you the best Plaintiff w i draw up a petition. No notice would A Lay eae jared be given to the party who was to be restrained. The court the only be We want you to investigate the claims of other dealers} This means, of course, that would hear but one side, and question would whether the p f put up a legally sufficient bond and get their lowest prices, then come to our store and| you will choose one of the The restrai x order would then be ned, and if the make comparisons. You will quickly realize why 278 pianos arty wh eyed it, he would were sold last month to discriminating purchasers e e in ‘ Our present sale prices during the remodeling of our Four Fine Th ed by one or two judges store have only been made possible by the tremendous buy- But on t discarded ing power of our organization—the largest retail piano how 4 Instead, when an tion is made, the cc sets a day forty flourishing stores » give you an idea, we wish to eee She othe ¥, cosy come jn to present ev piace ay that the president of one of America’s most prominent] that operate every day between and argument why the restraining order should not be issued piano manufacturers walked into our store the other day| Seattle and Portland via the The change is a welcome one, indeed and showed us a contract that Mr. Eilers made with their Sarat at, Sie . sacl company for 1,800 pianos, to be delivered within the next BOASTING BRYAN for his lecturing, Senator Brip eight months. You know that on an order of this magnitude | tow said: “If the time has come nguished public the price paid per piano was very much less than the} = ll pal a vate Si, See |small dealer, who buys a few pianos at a time owe: - 4 oe, ret hi aay bunch of ex-Standard Olt public geet is your duty to compare the values that other houses | which offers you these splendid | 2 r with the values we are giving the people during this| trains: officials ———————— cling sale. In no other way can you really satisfy Seattle-Portland Express SEATTLE DRAYAGE COMPANIES are experienc-| yoursel “ ‘ : y Ses 7 ing some difficulty in obtaining a restr x order. How | We care not whether a San Francisco branch house is afer A ae fe a.m, did they happen to overlook Judge Humy going to move, and does not care to pay drayage to its new rrives Portlan p. m. Shasta Limited Train De Luxe Leaves Seattle 11:30 a. m, Arrives Portland 5:30 p. m Puget Sound Express store, and so runs a sale to dispose of some of its stock, 2 | lor whether a piano man has been taken sick and can’t Poetry for the White House Bride! | pay his bills. You will find in our store the world’s best makes| Jof pianos at lower prices than they have ever been sold at ; rere 0 oy. natn to. love the Wedding: welnoe - ——_—_— ——Jbefore on this Pacific Coast, and on terms to suit your poem blished by S 1 f Penn eer Awe S _ Fa RET senile scan tient cael ‘i Leaves Seattle 11:45 a. m. i i _ —— ——nenernecemeamn | DOCKCt kk ‘ y A. bat ce caters sites TIOsS Il AN Y THING < Here are different makes to choose from—Chicker-| Arrives Portland 6:30 p. m, # ee Pe: as editorial poetry n X Lai N ES ing, Kimball r, Havelton, Haddorff, Storey & Clark,|OWL, the popular night train g er Sy occamon, f es we ws eee Reena cca, wre Decker, Eilers, Smith & Barnes, Marshall & Wendell, Ho-] Leaves Seattle 11:15 p. m 2 bound to call Blanche’s attention to a incongruity On the Plains 7 Force of Habit bart M. Cable, Emerson, Packard, Hallett & Davis, and] Arrives Portland 6:45 a. m. Or superfluity in her work, so that, in the years to come,/ . Horse Won’t Leave carla get tag cigahs ‘ beaks of her muse may w with head erect. The following sets (Berths can be occupied ai Second-hand pianos begin at $26 for squares and $68 or uprights, Brand new pianos, some slightly 9:30 p. m.) You will enjoy the benefits of ALL-STEEL COACHES : our poetic soul a-quiver 4 “Eager the groom on-the threshold stands, f Holding his arms and his outstretched hands Sp henge ” case damaged or We admit that it es, but it rattles. You couldn't marred, can be bought for $127, $142, $168, $212, $246, ete picture Bridgegroom ayre folding his arms Grand pianos start at $175 for second-hand ones and $430 and all the other features that Stretching his hands, with fists close lfor brand new ones the pen eo train serv- See @ welcoming the br layer pianos, second-hand, $275, $315 and $342; brand| ice affords. are held out, his hands have got to go @ par with such expressions as “a widow w the scene with his eves,” “running with his feet and legs,” etc. It rattles and jars, and when you poetically welcome a dear girl to her wedding, everything should run smoothly | and sweetly, like melted licorice. “Hands” rhymes with | | $387, $467 and $515 for good, dependable players, note on the keyboard and are thoroughly d by us Come in today after new ¢ |that play every warranted by their manufacturers a Don't put off buying any longer. looking around, and our prices an in this sale will convince you. The O-W. R. & N. places paramount your comfort and convenience. For further information and the quality of the pianos] reservation call on or phone, J. H. O'NEILL, District Passenger Agent, 716 Second Avenue, Telephone Main 932. | “stands,” well enough, but there are other words that a i fonscientious muse could command. Why not, “Eager the groom on the threshold stands, Holding his breath till he finds out her plans.” That'll be Frank’s fix, anyhow, before and, very likely, for a pretty considerable period after the wedding. Any reasonable terms will be accepted, Every instru- seen wore, Nove, Cree. Ge rem ment guaranteed as represented, ranch lynched a stranger?” “Yep, and it wuz pretty hard work, too,” “Did he struggie?” “Not that. But we had to ride “Why did you recommend flan- 60 miles before we found a tree,” nel cakes, when you have other FIRST THE reactionary organs lied, on their own ae things on the menu?” fesponsibility, about Senator Poindexter’s mythical “ap- hw + staph dh i on Ga Madam, 1 esed to work tn a éry pointees.” Now that Gilson Gardner has shown them up, jo. 1507 Erie av, al ST. JOSEPH, Mo,, July 31.—The a ighheuia ae ead of to Mr, and Mrs. Zimmerman,—Sheboygan (Wis,.) Journal. they adopt the sneaking, skulking method of reprinting each other’s comments, thus shifting responsibility from them- selves. chief of police, W. T. Gray, has re ceived a letter from Joseph Shipps, farmer of Stewarteville, which says he has a horse that won't stay But wouldn't it be a joke on the United States if Jack Johnson camo back? eee F We, for One, Shail Not Contradict/ sold. Hi ka thy plice to find “PUT GAUZE SHIRTS on the babies and turn them|~" °° °°* Sit 4 | the animat's latest owner, Shipps “4 loose!” says Dr. Young, Chicago’s health commissioner ciroulation about|sold the horse last spring to Lee] . effect that) Masoner, Stewartaviile, * Painter] soner sold it to a St Once in a while, a doctor rears upon his hind legs and roars|}f and Ma out some common sense that's a credit to his profession Joseph man. | |A few 4 0 Bhipps found the : jth | he vont Ue taatine "it ‘had v , i." REPORTED THAT Grandpa Diaz is to return tol} ;| turned to its old home, jumped the 5 Mexico, but as “an interested spectator” only. Don't do it, fence, and taken up quarters on the} : ig! Porfirio! It’s the interested spectator who's getting most Oe Sener: a of the bullets and least of the food see pac te Sone bold When a ‘anaes daughter as. | . Ds OID COURT having i bien) P 3 country If she mar. he knows that aving instructed the jury to ac it itizen of ¢ United ct t ' him, Boss Cox says: “This restores my Baa name.” Bet States. Which Ie where woman pe of & nettle, nore a y' 7 ag cents that George will return to the old pastime of mak-| ‘Tage gets the better of it. comune & ie a up Ohio courts. a pe ee iterate What Has Become of— LIEUT. BAUER has been put in a German prison for The leaning tower of Pisa, say six months for marrying, without his superior officer's con-| the cables, te me eens falling. | c og sent, a girl who couldn't support him. Next, it’s going to —— po Pines ti We ae cae be Germany worrying about race suicide. |twre of it, made many years Pr ee land it looked then as though It was t AT ANY RATE, Bryan is showing that there are other) j about. to fall, ; ii Oy seeeeaeeeciaenoaiilaias im ASK YOUR DEALER FOR aterial T } in 7 } : = FROM ALL ACCOUNTS, Spanish American war vet- 7 T Made t 'y anit g and ‘lay With Every Suit or Overcoat erans may meet old acquaintances in the meat confiscated y ade keel } by Deputy State Inspector Adams. PEOPRLM. ’ our easure & fv sda nai AO i £. DR. BIGGAR says that Rockefeller is now able to eat | HEEL PROOF Say epee CLOOR BAINT wv | SEATTLE PAINT CO, for Scrae cone ne | Pn v3, ACO Ns eee Questions That Mr. Cynthia Grey |; Cannot Answer Who was the Inventor of the wireloas fly screen?—C. J. J. How can I make e front porch SWING?—XXZZ. I am a molder. Can you tell me how to cast a shadow?—P, W Please give me a recipe for mak anything. Cuss the rich! They're even able to eat. A MILWAUKEEAN declares that when he married two women his mind was blank. Likely. Blank in some i: | cases, replete with pure idiocy in others. _ Summer Hints to Mothers Who ‘Care’ Suit or All Our Summer Overcoat “pyermigel ae oe oe ing parsnip jelly.-Mre. B, L. W. 6 ‘ Fry | tortaarserng the teat, “He wice a Year We Make This Exceptional Offer to It is well that mothers be advised | stretching?” ‘This question was Not to overfeed the children during the hot months. No one requires as much food in summer as fn win ter. Feed the children the lighter 2 find more easily-digested foods. Sec that the milk {# cool and kept away = from files. Be careful that the asked by @ correspondent and Mr. war answer it XXZZ ways ‘Do not use the rub- ber band and it will not stretch Or, {f you une it long enough, the stretch will disappear.” see unable to Our Many Customers ii lahat 1/2 Price There are countless fellows walking around in these Faultless Free Pants today, and fruit is ripe, and if the child begins ill. Th H . ° frult Je ripe, andi the child begins PN ge ab bes woe New arrivals in Fall og eg more Mea — ped Pants are a complimentary gift—to every man ordering much acid in the blood, deprive vernmen' ‘al a su cai A beets “ Bere sce 2 the, blood, deprive, 1 and the. thine haven ae it or overcoa' one of these suits could you buy at any small tajloring establishment | us areca that: ander | out of Newport, why not || Dresses and Tailored for less than $35.00. You will get a better selection of the more choice patterns by calling at our stores at the early part of this Free Pants Sale. these conditions there will be some lewport take the Suits at the lowest pri digestive disturbance, such as con-|breath and constipation, and Mra. poy Poli Pagid on . ory stipation, indigestion or summer |John Wallace, Scottsville, Ky., who Ps Pa x diarrhoea. It may be accompanied |finds it valuable to herself as welll. ve Don’t blame a policeman when he arrests © woman for wearing a slashed skirt. What does a police man know about seenery? by a cold or by eruptions of the skin. The timely remedy, and one which you can rely on for results, is a small -dose of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin on retiring, and by morning the bowels will move and the trouble will vanish. The excep tional tonic ingredients in this rem edy will tone the stomach and en. rich the blood, and the child will feel its usual self again. Many families like that of Mr William Weber, 29 Edwin Place, Buffalo, N. Y., who uses it for foul as her children, are never without| it, keeping it for just such emerg. encies. You also can obtain a bot tle of Dr, Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin at fifty cents or one dollar of any druggist. Families which once use this pleasant-tasting laxative for-|typewriter muffler, To be used, we ever after discard cathartics, purga-| suppose, when she's chewing gum. tives, salts and pills see Families wishing to try a free| “While down E last week,” sample bottle can obtain It, | postcards T, KE. G., “I attended a paid, by addressing Dr. W. B, Cald-|band concert at which the trombohe well, 418 Washington 8t, Montl-|player did not play ‘Silver bhreds cello, 1k. Among the Gold,.’” i Northwestern Cloak & Suit Co, 1329 First Avenue (Near Union) eee A Cleveland man has Invented a English Woolen Mills 704 First Ave. TWOSTORES 1035 Third Ave.

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